trinting: MEP caerunever zimicoastatcpmrocps3. Nesay and Promptly Resonated, at the ADVNIMBER OFFICE, LEBANON, PRIMA Tall establishment is now Bundled with an extensive assortment of JOB TYPB, which will be increased es the patronage demands. It can now turn out Panama, of way deeeription, in a neat eittillxiiildittous uniiitiet andene levy renaonable tiftlife. 'Such as Pampliatits, Neatness Cards, Handbills, tirculars, Labels, Bill Headings, .Blanks, Programmes, Bills of Pkre,, Limitations, Tickets, fib;, ace. air DUN of all kinds, Common and Judgment Bonne. School, Justices', Constables' and other Btanns,.printed Correctly and neatly on the best paper, constantly kept for sale at this office, at, prices "to suit the times:" , ***Subscription piles bf 'the LEDA ADyIIR'fISHR Doilthlind a Nair a Year. . •kddfdes, Wat. M. Dasal.mi,,Lebiuton Pa. • _ • !Ta t. ictott o. THE H MINTED HOUSE. It was near the One(' of _a sultry 'day in August that I .drew up my ttired heirs° 'before the door of the Via* Bear—where entertainment .vas to be obtained for man and beast th(, laboriously creaking sign vol- Untarily informed the passer-by: Having seen Pluto well cared for, a•nd in a" clean stall, saunterer into bar-rooki, and . , having nothihg 'better to da; sat down to listen,to the 4 convereation of the -half dozen - lotilig: 7 'ere there congregated. +I Booked over the books on itio'ta.- Ide, but they were all airy a k rilalttiye and cookery,: .and lee theiti pass. I was young thea—just twenty three,—and was' travelling !solely' to . pass away the time of my summer vacation (was"then ;a "mem ber of the T ' LaW'Ophool), and from the love of adventilie. As yet, however, very ;little in the way of adventure had befallen Me.— Life had gone on rather monotonously; /And I had strayed 11,way hero into the Illitciteivouds 'or Maine in the forlorn hope that I might meet with some thing strikingly out of the usual way. Evidently, my entrance had, inter rupted the conversation of the gen tlemen ; ,for there followed a'pause, broken at last, by at all military look agman in rough coat and topboots. "There was a daughter, wasn't there, landlord ?" he asked. "Yes," replied that individual, so tshortly that I scrutinized him more 'closely than 1 had before done. The scrutiny threw little light on his char acter. His physiognomy was per fectly unreadable. He might, .or might not, be a bad man. He was short, thick-set, with a red face, bushy eye-brows, and a coldly-glit- tering steel blue eye. "Well, it was a startling affair for thiS one-horse place," continued he'of the top-boots, removing his cigar.— "It happened four years ago, you say, and the daughter has not been heard of since ? Strange-!" "Yes, it will be four years come next Christmas," said a whitehaired old man who had not before Spoken. .“4. terrible night, sir ; freezing cold, BD) e ti gi MAY - I 'l4 / 1 44 3 Roger Hampton and his wife were .murdered; and from that day to this, nro human eye, so far as we know, %as ever looked on Margaret Hamp- ton." "What do you think became of her, 'Granger ?" asked one of the men ad dressing the old man. "1. ? Think ? I know not what to think. It was currently reported that she dealt the death-wounds, and then fled to save herself from suspi cion ; but I believe nothing of the kind. I remember her as a,, lovely and affectionate girlond of that mur der she is pure as the angels in heav en." "Of what were you speaking, gen tlemen, WI may inquire ?" I ,asked drawing up to the table where tliey were sitting. , The circle courteously. Widened to admit me; people:always like to tell what they know, if properly request ed to do so. , "We were talking over a tragedy that occurred near here, some four years ago, in an old mansion known as 'Hampton's Death," replitti he, cif the top-boots.—" Mr. Hampton and bis wife were - murdered ; and their only daughter, Margaret,—a girl of 401gliteens or thereabouts,—has never been seen since." .' "Indeed," 1 said, "but that , is very singular 1 Who resides at 'Hampton's Death' now ?" "Bless you, young man," cried the landlord, "You couldn't hire anybody to enter the doors of a sunshiny day; and as for living there—why , the place is haunted • .and one ' foolhardy young fellow w ho , went there to pass the night, on a wager, lost,his reason before morning. He's been wander-. ing ever since, Etat no ono knows what he saw there." "Humph And so the place is a ruin ?" "Getting to be, sir. You can just see it'froin the window there." 'He pointed out, And I saw at the distance of half a mile, perhaps, the chimnies of a large house, clearly de fined against the red sunset sky. "Did Mr. Hampton possess any property ?" I asked. • "It was generally supposed that he had a large sum of gold by him," said the landlord ; "but nothing was prey od after the murder. There were some thousands of dollars • worth of real estate." "And who was the heir of that ?" • "My wife, sir," said the landlord.— "She was the next of kin after Mar garet—the niece of Mr. Hampton.— Bat the old house and its imm9diate grounds are a dead weight on our hands ; we could not give them away." • • I made a few more inquiries, and `then the conversation turned to other topics ; and soon afterward supper was announced. At the supper ta ble I saw the landlady—a tall, hand some woman in the prime of life, with a bold black eye, and an air of arro gance particularly insufferable in one by duty bound to be respectfully en tertaining. • - I was shown to my room soon after supper;" an airy apartment exactly Lebanon VOL. 16--NO. 10. Oyer the :bar4vom: My epriosity. • , *as erettifed. The 'Story .1' =heard tyliont "Ramp- DeaW"was roinantie entnigh te: excite the interest of liilmogt Any= young reViiif thFe`e, and, tw„enty, and% perhaps. TAO h 'fail, SlVare of itoinTioet in my composition. I rthre*,4 the west windo*, and looked out;.'. The evening was ,and looked There. was a slight breeze blowina and the pale moon "had` just risen. The .gray old front.. of Hampton's Death_ w,aa distinctly viisil;lo,...lociming i gloomily:frorajt ma* Of„,evergrecim, it was a singular featuye,, in 'that,. backwoods landscape man;) Mon, built in A I..Qle:6V:tit - knot inee. 7; gp . o.)sty).o 04.0.4teottirc. Its, peculating•about.it._ , The. In an_zwilo. plapned,that . bnading riqr to- his neighbors;.,. .had, both taste 'and. love,i c of: the ‘beautiful._• There. was. harmony)be =tween the stolle gables . of the tonic, and the datiJk:iiinte forest stretching, awityrfor miles- , behind it,: But this. distant, view did not satisfy.rae. Nce tef ,to see : the inside,..to tread the" long 'closed chambers, and stand, per-. haps, in the very. spot where,-on that boisterous Christmas night, two souls' had been so . suddenly launched into. :Eternity. • But I did not care, to have those below know of my feolhardiness., as the landlord would probabl yterfn I would wait till they were all iii. bed.' I sat there quietly, listening to the melancholy voice of a whip-poor-will, away off in the copse-wood, the still ness growing around me, and even the light bregze foldingits wings and sinking to sleep in the leaves. All was quiet ; the housewas wrap 7 ped in slumber. I examined my,pis • cols, put on fresh caps,-andtlien4soft-. ly let myself down to the ground by means of the strong tendrils of a grapevine that had climbed up to my window. It was only a little walk to the old rain—not more than half a mile across the fields, to - the dilapidated board fence that separa. ted the grounds from the adjacent lots. I sprang overin to the lonesome garden, now choked with rank weeds and grass, and stood in the shadow of the pile of buildings. Very massive and gloomy it looked, with its weatber•stained walls and high, narrow windows gleaming white in the cold moonlight. The quaint gables and carved dormer windows shed a black shade over the front ; the path to the hall door was obstruct ed with. wild vipesandjAmbia,A,ll4l 4_ es • very threshold. ----- Everything about the place was dead and silent as a tomb. No won. der people said it, was haunted, with that old tale of clime and death hang ing around it. I tried the door, but it was fast. So were the windows. I went around to the back part, but it .was closely secured. I pried off a cornice with my knife after Borne difficulty, and by that means removed a Window sash, leaving the aperture free. Looking in, I saw a largo apart• ment, evidently the kitchen. Every. thing had beenTift , just as it was be tore the curse had fallen : the tin pans still gleamed on the dresser, and the kettle still sat on the deserted hearth. I sprang in, and passed to the inte-' rior of the ,building, a dark corridor, to what must bays been a parlor. Part of the furniture still remained; the green carpet was gray with, dust, and the chairs and sofas had put, on the sackcloth of mould and moth. A bat flapped against the window as I•entered, escaping through a bro ken pane ;:and somewhere not far distant, I heard the shrill scream of the n c ight-hawk. A distant door slammed to in the draught of air I had admitted, all striking witlystart ling distinctness on the dead air of that unhappy place. But 1 was not, frightened ; it was all very novel and delightful to me. If L could only see the ghost, I thought, L should have something to tell my grandchildren. From thence I passed through two smaller rooms to a large ball, in the middle of which rose a broad stair case. This I. ascended, the tong unu seal stairs e,reaking weirdly beneath my, tread, as if astonished at their un wonted burden. A door at the head of the landing stood slightly ajar. I pushed it open and entered a long, narrow chamber, dimly lit up by the moonlight struggling through the dusky glass. Ooe glance showed me that "this was the ghostly chamber." There were dark, rod stains on the counterpane of the •bed, and near the centre of the floor the delicate carpet was discolored with what had once been a pool of blood. Here, then, the deed was commit ted. If these silent walls•could speak What a tale of violence and crime they might reveal ! While 1 stood there thinking how once the death-shrieks of that hapless old man and his wife had resounded ' through "the_ room, wondering where the guilty murder er was hiding—wondering what trag ic fate had overtaken the fair garet, I heard the faint sound of,, a human footstep. Convinced that :.I was not mistaken, I listened intently. It was repeated. No ; there was no mistake. I looked at my pistols once more, to make sure that all wasright. HI were to meet flesh and 'blood, those trusty weapons might prove my beet friend, if only ghosts, 1 might save myself the trouble of trusting to gun powder. There was a door on the opposite side of the chamber leading through several rooms to a second hall, smelt• er than the first; and from this lan another fligitt of staireaseendedjisid; LEBANON, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1864. ing, probably, to the attics. I hur ried through, and paused at the foot of these-stairs: -I could hear thestep joryLdisti netly«no i;_iibseemed , to ,be ,almost over, ,my ,heat,l- r ,, soft, Might-, and hurried, pagip,g c back, : apd(orth j . eveii,Abought .I„co,iild distinguish the slight rustling.ofsgarments and as I stood , breathless,, a low moan tole ,to my ear—so thrilling low that felt the rosy blood around my heart sbrink and grow cold. 'A, , ton,Earle I are you a cowarill" fsaid to myself, and the bare -insinu- Atjen was enongh to send ,nae forward. n t .up e stairs, _tyre at a hound, : but was stopped bya: strong -oaken ,dpor. • Istried-to break . it clevvni„ but, it resisted:all my efforts. wen tu,back 4 1.9, gni li,e-oh am bars . ;: - bg I on s .•and ' ; iv , rerictied . off t the-greats poet of a .3na. hogany..ltcskteadi 0.110 returning, ; used th t air-a 1 spy t,„ of . hattaring-ram: 'mere wooden - door.could long. Aiih r stand-sue.h- an attack as I ...ruade,l tic that.one, and ere long ,I hail the alt• isfaction of seeing it tall inwards. I leaped over the ruirisfinte the apart ment thus opened before me,. but 'it ,Wll.B, bare and ucfurnished,.. Not' a thing, animate or ina,nimate„ to, • dis turb the ghostly devastatiop.i- , I glanced.quickly - oirer.the walls in, sear h, of some 'secret passage,: apd the farther corner, I perceived a slide. fastened with massive j bolts the, outside. drew back the bars,. and . paused a moment betore I sought to , penetrate the mysteries that door concealed. My heart beat so loudly could hear it, but / 'laid My band thereon - and found . it beat calm -and strong. ; < A vague, nameless something thrill ed through iny.„-sou.l as 1 stood there. It seemed to Ane as if 1 were about to enter on a new n,n4.,sweeter existence. The hand of. Destiny itself was upon me. I opened the door slowly and stood on the threshold. What did I see ? The moon was shining brightly in to the chamber, flooding every re mote corner with its silvery brilliance. I - could distinguish everything with the greatest minuteness. In the centre of the room stood a slight spectral in its slenderness, with a lace white as marble, and masses of black hair flowing down over sable garments. The shadowy hands were locked together; the great, mild, dark eyes were fixed ape my face with an expression of terror and won der. advanced to the side of the phan tom form. Whether it was ghost or lisijie..wpman. I kaa.w_nat__:_lmil_waa ___lteis..,,kietest.,_,sitddestVoice na.a ever heard, addressed - Ine. 'Who are you?" "Why are you here?" "Why lam here, depends on cir cumstances." • I paused, furl waguncertain wheth er I was speaking to the flesh or the spiri t. "Oh I" she cried, springing toward me and taking my hand' in both of hers; so soft4iiid warm', "only say that, you have come to take me a way from here Only release me and I will be your slave foreverl" The suspicion that had all along been forming in my mind, broke out in the abrupt question : "Are You Alargare.. Hampton ?" ' 'Years ago l witsvalled "Good G-od _and where, have you been sinee--sip . 4e„ , that. Christmas night ?" "tre're, 'always. - Oh, sir if you kneW the half I have -suffered, you would take me away KC I replied by liftirigheein. my arms and bearing her down over the stairs to life and freedom , once more. It' was the happiest moment of my ex istence when I stood with her on.tho greesward in front of Hampton's Death, with the silver:rairr.-ofttlie ob si'ructed moonlight falling over us. Stu) - Shivered at the touch of the might air. How very long it had been since she had felt the free, fresh air. I took off my coat and button ed it around 'her, placing her in the shadow of a tall fir tree, that she might have the support of its rugged trunk. "You will not be afraid to stay hero while I get my horse ?" I asked. "Where is it ?" "At Carl Jansen's hotel." I thought she shuddered at the name—my suspicions were fast tak ing a tangible form. "Yes, 1 will stay--but, oh ! you will not desert me ?" "Desert you I May God smite me dead if fthink of it I" I exclaimed, and flew °goner th'e field's to the host lery. I was young and enthusiastic then. My plan was all formed.— Plato was strong and willing, he could carry us both &wily, and 1:46t, on his back, feeling for the noble'tel loW an affection strong as that of a man for bis brother. He needed no urging; he seemed wild to got away from the vicinity of the Black Bear; and it was hardly five minutes before I had Margaret Hampton up before me. With one hand I guided the horse, the other arm held the slight form to niy side—l was afraid [should lose her if I did not hold her fast. Half an 'hour's brisk gallop brought us to the little village of. Lowridge, and soon alter I had the landlord of the G-lobe louse out of bed, and very much at my service. I took Margaret into the parlor, and made her tell me her story in as few words as possible. The land lord was a magistrate, and took down her statement. Two hours, af terwaids I was on my way to the Black Bear, with four,constables,and warranta. or thearrest of : Carl Jan sen 011 the charge of murder. ~; We entered the tavern without core. mony, and' took the guilty wretch in bed by the side; of his equally guilty wife. . . Hwsvasletl i g6l in .the co in arid the beat' afternoon a judicial' ex - amination tank -:place. , Margaret's testimony .wasamply sufficient tcieon vict him, add lie was taken back to the place Of has confinement ,to await his trial at it kigher court. .. Three dayis afterwards , he waa found dead itt„his cell. He ~had died from the effects of poison brought him by his;wVe ; and the sante day she too wat9seized with a fatal ill 'nest that inA've hours.ended ter life. Justice was iJefrauclecl. of Jts .dues. „Jansen leftla -writ:ten confessipn in ,fullo. He , en44ered•upou all the herr'. _13,1e .particol4 with, fiendish, niauce ness;, and I awl eloquently, on: the ,drillwitlytW t cli u he,•. avoided_detec- Ol klo.n. It-ewn — aalirhad:expected -;! Ar 43. ,laildS4l betug,.the ; •next-heir after Margaret to the Hampton wealth the wretched couple had, formed .1 he plan of, raurderipg the whojefaroily, ..i R . order to sdcure ;the property. A night whetv 4 #ll.oe servents were Away at a Ch•rtst.tnas Testival.was se lected,• and the deed was: done; done; , only Jansen could mot find it in his heart '.to sacrifice Margaret. There was a tender spot ,in the villain's : nature,- after 'all. Long ago, in ,his early taanbood, loa Auld loved a.woman Of ' whose face Mittgaret's was the coun terpart. TtOg lo woman had died, in her young liVOcenee, in her lover's armrs, and lohe sake of that tender memory, the kr . l, who resembled her, Bin was spared., t she had been kept a close prisoner - f.,every one believed her dead, and'A Oahe was, to all in tents and purplass. Jansen had car ried her food atlsiated intervals ; and encouraged the prevailing belief that the old house was haunted, to the best of his ability, The young man who had gone there to pass the night had been frightened by some diabolical contrivance of -Jansen's ; and I only escaped a similar fate i)y •keeping my intention of goinglaere a secret. I took MargareNt once, to my mother in Boston„ and then, as the associations of her early home were so painful to her, I sold out the, prop erty, and placed the proceeds to her credit. When I gave the certificates of stock into her hands, I said. "There, Margaret, the old life is buried. Now you can begin the new. She did not reply, but, sat there in the mellow sunshine, her beautiful face troubled, her beautiful eyes cast (loan Lon ; you , w Ili gbfin LO 1 laiief--;, an _ a great belle.” - _ cl b_e "No," she said, softly ;"I no not wish to be a belle, Clinton." "What would you be, if you could, Margaret 2" She lifted her sweet face to mine.. I caught her to my breast, and held her prisoned there. " W odd you be my wife, Margaret 2" And she answered. oyes:, So she was—so she is now,: and has been these many .happy years; Gad bless her I And every day my heart is full of eloquent gratitude to an in scrutable Providence, Inr . sending me, in_ a fit of romaaticcuriosity, to spend a, night at Hampton's Death." POLITICAL. n Important Paper. 'ROTEST OF LEADING REPUBLICANS AGAINST DICTATORIAL USURPATIONS A CAUtTiit HUM Senator Wade, of Ohio, rad Representative Davis, of Maryland, hold np Linoolife•Usne- Pation of Power to the Reprobation and Scorn of - the Freemen of.the "United States. !TO TUE SUPPOItTERS• I OF THE GOVERN- EN We have read - Witbdut Surprise, hut not without indignation„ the procla mation of the President of 'the Bth of July, 180. The siipporters ef'_rthe Administra tion are responsible ,to the country for its conduct ; and it is their right and duty to check the encroachments of the Executive on the authority , of . Congress, and to require it to' confine itself to its proper sphere: • !'' It is impossible to pass in silence this proclamation:Without neglecting that duty ; and, having-taken as much responsibility as, any others in sup porting the Administration, we are not disposed to fail in the other duty of asserting the rights ~of Congress. The President did not sign the bill "to guarantee to certain States whose Governments have been usurped a republicanform of Govern m ent,'' pass ed by ~the supporters of his adminis tration in both Houses of Congress after mature deliberation. The bill did not, therefore,- become a law, and it is, therefore, nothing. The proclamation is neither an ap proval nor a veto of the bill ; it is, therefore, a document unknown to the laws and Constitution of the United States. So far as it contains an apology for not signing the bill, it is a political manifesto against the friends of the Government. So far as it proposes to execute the bill which is not a law, it is a grave Executive usurpation. It is'. &ting that the facts neces sary to enable the friends of the Ad ministration to apprebiate the applo gy and the usurpation be spread be fore. them.. ' l . _ ''"Ttee pkiidlamatiot. says : • Abticttis.t. And whereas the said bill was presented to the President of the United States for his approval less than one hour before the sine die adjourn ment of said session and was not signed by him-- If'that is accurate, still this bill was presented with other bills which were' signed: , • ~Tlth„'n that hour, the time for trne sine die adjournment was three times posponed by the votes of both Houses ; and the least intimation- of a - desire for more time by. the President to consider this bill would have secured a further postponement. Ydt the Committee sent to ascer tain if the President had any further communication' for the House of Rep resentatives reported that he had none; and the friends of the bill, who had anxiously waited on him to as certain its fate, had already been in ,fo , rmed that the President had resolv ednot.to sign: it. The dine - of presentation therefore;, 'had:nothing to do isith his failare to approve it. The bill had been discuised and con sidered.fOr More than a month in the Houk of Representatives, which it passed on the 4th of May ; it was re ported to the Senate on the 27th cf May without material amendment, and passed the Senate absolutely:as it came froth the House on the 2d of Ignorance of its contents is out of the question. - Indeed, at his .request, a draft of a, bill substantially the samein all ma terial points, and identical in the points objected to by the proclama tion, had been laid. before him for his consideration in the winter of 1862- 63. ENE I There_is, therefore, no reason to suppose the provisions of the bill took the President by surprise. On the contrary, we have reason to believe them to have been so well. known that this method of preventing the bill from becomin , ra law without the constitutional responsibility of a ott veto, had been resolved on long before the bill passed the Senate. We are informed by gentlemen en titled to 'entire confidence, that before the 22d of June, in N. Orleans, it was stated by a member of Gen. Banks' staff, in the presence of other Gentle men in official position, that Senator Doolittle had written a letter to the department that the House recon struction bill would be staved off in the Senate to a period too late in the session to require the President to ve to it in order to defeat it, and that Mr. Lincoln would retain The bill, if necessary, and thereby defeat it. --. The experience of Senator Wade, - • . PonAiriArpig t fate ot-to thy% • cj„.-3Kn_qpite dieted by letters received from ew Orlos.,ns before it had passed the Senate. Had the proclamation stopped there, it would have been only one other defeat of the-will of the people by an executive perversion of the Constitution. ; •-• But it goes further. • The President says : And whereas the said bill - contains, among other things, a plan•foriestoring the ;States - in rebellion to their - proper practical re iatien in the Union which plan expresses the ScOse of Con gressupon tha t subject, and which plan it is now thought fit Way before the people:for their eon sideratpn.,, ty,lyha..atitholjty of,the:Ooostitu 4,iom? w kat forms' f ? The:-„rcaulta to .:be!..,declareq.; fly, „whom . ? With, what effect when ascertained? . Is it to be alaw ;by the approval of the people without the approval . of Congress, at the will of the. Presi• dent ? • • ; Will the President,, on. his opinion of the popular approval, exeente it, as law? Or is this merely a device to avoid the serious responsibility of defeating a law on which so many hearts repos ed for security ? But the reasons now assigned for not approving the bill are full of ominous significance: The President prOceeds : Now, therefore, I, ABRATIAIt LINCOLN, Presi dent of the United States, do proclaim, declare, and make known, that, while I am (as I was in December last, when by proclamation I pro pounded a plan for restoration) unprepared by a formal approval of this bill, to be inflexibly committed to any signal plan of restoration— That is to , say the President is ,re solved that the people shall not by law take any securities from: the reb 'el St4tes against a renewal of the re bellion before restoring their . power to govern us. His Wisdom and prudence-are to be our `suffiCient guarantees . ? lie further says : And, while I' am'anprepared to declare that he Free State Constitutions and Governments already 'adopted and installed in Arkansas and .J.,Ouisiana shall be set aside and held for naught thereby repelling and discouraging the loyal cit. izens who hove set up the same as• to further ef fort— . That is to say, the President per sists in. recognizing .those shadows of Governments in Arkansas and Louisi- ana, which Congress formally declar ed should not be recognized—whose Representatives and Senators were repelled by for Mal votes of both Houses of Congress—which it was declared formally shOuld have no elec- Viral vote. for President and Vice President.. They are the. mere creatures of his will. They cannot live day without his support. They are mere oligar chies, imposed on the people by Mili tary orders , under the forms of elec tion, at which generals,'provost-mar shals, soldiers and camp-followers were the chief actors, assisted by a handful of resident citizens, and urged on to premature action by private letters from the President. In neither Louisiana nor Arkansas, before Banks' defeat, did the Utited States ..control half the territory or half the population'. In Louisiana, 17+ 7 11.0LE NO. 792 General Bank's proclamation candid ly declared :1 , :The fundamental law of the State is Martial Law." Qn that foundation of freedom he ,erected-what the President calls "the free Constitutiiound Government of But of this State whose fundamen, tal-law was martial law, only,sixteen r parishes. out of forty-eight parishes were held `by the United States ; and: in five °Mho' sixteen we held only . our camps. The eleven paristes we substAke ly. held had 133.185 inhabitanWl . . e residue of - the State not held by us, At the farce called the election.• the officers of Gen. Banks returned that 11,346 ballots were cast ; but whether airy or by whom the people of thejinited StateEkhaye no legal as ;, but it is lirohable that 4,000 were Citst:hY soldiers or employees of tlleill:riiited-States.-inilitary or inuni , . ciptkihyt runic -according to any law, State or%tional, and 7,000 ballots represent the State of Louisiana. Such is the free Constitution and Government. of Louisiana ; and like it is that of Aarkaßsas. Nothing but the failure of a military .expedition deprived us Oa like one in the swamps of Florida; and before the Presiden, tial election; like ones may be organ ized in every rebel State where• the United State's have a camp. The President, by preventing this bill from becoming a law, holds . the electoral votes of the rebel .States at the dictation of his personal ambi tion. •If those votes turn the balance in his favor, is it to be supposed that bis competitor, defeated by such meaus, will acquiesce ?. If the rebel Majority- assert their supremacy in those States, and send votes which elect an enemy of the Government, will we not repel his claims ? And is not that civil war for the Presidency, inaugurated by the votes of rebel States? Seri o usly impressed by !these dan gers, Congress, "the proper Constitu tional authority," formally declared that there are no State Governments in the rebel States, and provided, for their erection at a proper time ; and both the Senate and House of Repre sentatives rejected the Senators . and Representatives chosen .under the au thority of what, the President calls the free Constitution and Govern ment of Arkansas, The President's proclamation "*olds for naught' this judgment, and discards the authority of the Su preme Court, and strides headlong to be chosen in either of those States a sinister light will be cast on The motives which induced the President to "hold for naught" the . will of Con. gress rather than his Government in -Louisiana end Arkansas. The judgment of 'Congress which the President defies was an exercise 'Of an authority.exclusively vested in Congress by the Constitution to .de termine what is the established Gov ernment in a State,and in its own na lureand by the highest aa tliptity binding on all other depart-, merits of the GoVerament, Ttie Siiptem 6'o6l'lk — has fornially liberated that under - 0e- fourth section' of the. fifth article - of-the Constitution requiring the United States to guar- • antee to every State a republican forth of government, "it rests with Con-• gress .to decide what government is' the established one in a State; and "When Senators and Representatives of a State are admitted into the councils of -.the Union, the authority of the Govern ment under which they are appoiked, as Well as its republican character, is recognised by the proper constitutional authority; and its decision is ..binding on every. .department of the Government and could not be que,stioried in a ju dicialtribunal. It is true that the contest in this case did not lust long enough to bring this -matter to this issue;- arid as no Senators or Repre sentatives were elected under the au-• thority of the Government of which Dorr was the head, Congress was not called upon to decide the con troversy.—Yet the right to decide is placed there." Even the President's proclamation of the Bth, of December, formally de clares that "Whethei members are sent to Congress from any State shall be admitted to seats, constitutionally rests exclusively with the respective Houses, and not'to any extent with .tbe Eiecutive." And that is not the less true be. cause wholly ineonsistent• with the -President's assumption in that proc lamation of a right to institute and recognize State Governments in the rebel Statee,.nor because the Presi dent is unable to perceive that his recognition is a nullity if it be 'not Conclusive on Congress. Under the Constitution the right to Senators and Representatives is inseparable from a State; Govern ment: lf there be aState Government, the right is absolute. If there bo no State Government, there can be no Senators orßepresen Waives chosen. . The Two Houses of Congerss are expressly declared to be the sole judg es of their own members. ' When, therefore,Senatore and Rep resentatives are admitted, the State Government;under whose authority they were chosen, is conclasively es tablished ; when they are rejected its existence is as conclusively rejeced and denied; and. to this judgment , the President is bound to submit Preeident procieeds to express gititistrtiotr: A FAINTLY PAPER FOR TOWN AND COUNTRY, IS PRINTED AND PUBLISHED WEEKLY By 'MA. M. Bleki3JVH, 2d Story of Funck's New Builßiiig, Cubit=land St At One Dollar and Fifty Cents a Year Oar ADVERTISEMENTS ipecrted at the naval rates. sip-HANDBILLS Printed at an home notice. RATES OF POSTAGE. In Lebanon County, postage free In Penneytrania, out of Lebanon county 5 cents pee quarter, or 2q cents a year. Ont of this State, 634 eta. per quarter, or 26 ots. a year !f the postage is not paid in advance, rates are doable. his unwillingness "to declare a con stitutional competency in Congress to abolish slavery in 'States . " as an other 'reason 'fo"r not signing the bill. But the billnowhere proposes to abolish slavery in the States. The bill did provide that all slaves in the rebel States should be manumitted. But as the President bad already signed three bills, manumitting sever al classes of slaveS in States, it is not conceived possible - that be entertained any'scruples touching that provision of the krill Tesdpecting Which he is sb. .lent. He has already himself assumed a right by,preclamation to free much the large number of slaves in the reb , . el States, under the authority given him by Congress to nee military pow er to suppress the rebellion ; and it is quite inconceivable that the Presi dent should think Congress could vest in him a discretion it could not exercise itself. It is the more unintelligible from the fact that, except in respect to a small part of 'Virginia and Louisiana the bill covered only what the procla mation covered—added a Congres sional title and judicial remedies by law to the disputed title under the proclamation, and perfected the work the President professed to be so anx ious to accomplish. Slavery as an institution cab be a bolished only by a change of the Con stitution of the United States or of the law of the State ; ana'this is the principle of the bill. It required the new Constitution of the State to provide for that prohibi- tion-, and the President, in the face of his own proclamation, does nor ven ture to object toinsisting on that con dition—yet he defeated the only pro vision imposing it! But when be describes himself, in spite of this great blow at emancipa tion, as "sincerely hoping and ex pecting that a constitutional amend ment abolishing slavery throughout the nation may bn adopted," we eu rionsly inquire on what his expecta tions rest, after the vote of the House of Representatives at the recent ses sion, and in the face of the political complexion of more than enough of the States to prevent the possibility of its adoption within any reasona ble time; and why he did not in= dulge his sincere hopes . With so large an installment of the blessing as his approval of the bill would have se cured. After this assignment of his reason for preventing the bill from becom ing a law, the President proceeds to declare his purpose to execute it as a the one very proper plan for the loyal people of any State choosing to adopt it ; end that I em, and at all times shall be, prepared to give the gxecative aid and assistance to any such peo ple so soon as the military resistance to the Uni ted States shell have been suppressed in any such State, and the people tberefor shall have sufficiently returned to their obedience to the Constltution and the laws,of the United States ; in which cases Military Governors will be ap pointed, with directions to proceed Recording to the b A more studied outrage on the legislative authority of the people has never been perpetrated. Congress passed a bill ; the Presi dent refused to approve it, and then by proclairiatircia pits as much of it , in force as he sees fit, and proposes to execute •those parts by officers tin ! known' to": 06!: laws of the United States and not"subject to the confir 'mation of: the Senate.f. The bill directed the `appointment of Provisional Goveenore by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The President, after defeating the law, proposes to appoint without the advice and consent of the Senate, _Military Governors for the rebel States 1 He has already exercised this dic tatorial usurpation in Louisiana, and he defeated the bill to prevent its lim itation. Henceforth we must regard the fol lowing precedent as the Presidential law of the rebel States : ENECUTIVB. MANSION, WASHINGTON' Maroh 15,/861. Ms Excellency, Michael Huhn, Governor of Louisiana: Until farther orders you are hereby invested with the powers exercised hitherto by the Milita ry Governor of Louisiana. Yours. ABRAHAM LINCOLN. This Michael Hahn is no officer of the United States: the President without law, without the advice and consent of the Senate; by a pri vate note not even countersigned by the Secretary of State, makes him dictator of Louisiatia. The bill provided for the civil Ad ministration of the laws of the State —till it should be in a fit temper tio govern itself—repealing all laws rec ognizing slavery, and making all men equal before the law. These benificent provisions the President has annulled. People will die, and marry, and transfer proper ty, and buy and Bell—and these acts of civil life courts and officers of the law are necessary. Congress legisla ted for these necessary things, and the President deprives theta of the protection of law. The President's purpose to instruct his Military Governors "to proceed according to the bill"—a makeshift to calm the disappointment its de feat has occasioned—is not merely a grave usurpation but a transparent delusion. Re cannot "proceed according to , the bill" after preventing it from be coming a law. Whatever is done will be at his will and pleasure, by persons responsible to no law, and more interested to se cure the interests and execute will of the President than of the people and the will of Congress is to OS iladd of